The UK Pensions Minister Torsten Bell has updated MPs on the impact of the frozen state pension policy on British retirees living overseas, including thousands based in Thailand. The policy affects nearly half a million UK pensioners who live in countries where annual state pension increases under the triple lock do not apply.
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For those in Thailand and other affected nations, including Canada, New Zealand and South Africa, pension payments remain fixed at the rate first received after leaving the UK. Some individuals are reported to be receiving as little as £20 a week, compared with the current full new state pension of £241.30 a week.
The update was given on 2 June 2026 in response to a parliamentary question about the impact of frozen pensions on UK pensioners living abroad. The minister confirmed that the UK State Pension is payable worldwide regardless of nationality, but annual uprating only applies where there is a legal requirement, typically under reciprocal agreements.
Thailand remains one of the countries where such an agreement does not exist, meaning British retirees there do not benefit from yearly increases. The policy has been in place for decades and has been maintained by successive governments.
Campaigners from the End Frozen Pensions group have long argued that the policy disproportionately affects retirees who moved to Thailand after working in the UK. They claim many affected individuals, including veterans and former civil servants, were not informed that their pensions would be frozen before leaving the country.
The group estimates that 86% of those impacted were not made aware of the rule change in advance. They also describe the policy as a political decision that could be reversed through domestic legislation.
In his response to MPs, Torsten Bell reiterated that the existing approach remains government policy and indicated there are no plans for change in the near future. He said priority continues to be given to pensioners residing in the UK when allocating additional pensioner benefits.
For British retirees in Thailand, this means state pension payments will continue at fixed rates without inflation-linked increases unless future policy changes are introduced.
The Mirror reported that the frozen pensions system is expected to remain in place for UK retirees living in Thailand and other non-uprating countries unless new bilateral agreements or domestic legislative changes are made. Campaigners continue to lobby for reform, but the government has signalled stability in the current policy framework.
Adapted by ASEAN Now Mirror 6 June 2026